Saw that live on TV last night. What a cool moment. He has a knack for setting his milestone records in San Fran. Steroids or not, he's one of the greatest hitters ever. By the way, major props to the Washington Nationals, who challenged him throughout and didn't wuss out like so many other teams do.Barry, Barry, Barry!!!
I'm not a huge baseball fan, but I just can't take this record seriously. Most of the home run stats of the past decade will always have a big * next to them IMO.Saw that live on TV last night. What a cool moment. He has a knack for setting his milestone records in San Fran. Steroids or not, he's one of the greatest hitters ever. By the way, major props to the Washington Nationals, who challenged him throughout and didn't wuss out like so many other teams do.
That opinion is shared by many baseball fans as well. This record, along with the single season home run records that McGwire and Bonds broke, will always be tainted in the eyes of many. I'm torn about it myself. I think the record itself is the most hollowed one in all American sports. Therefore, I want to honor it just for that reason. Plus, IMO, the tragedy of it all is that Bonds would've been considered one of the greatest players of all time even WITHOUT steroids. He didn't need to juice up, he was that good. I don't think an official * is required next to the record, even if Bonds is convicted of using steroids later on. Otherwise like you said, the entire past decade should have an * next to all records. In due time Alex Rodriguez should break this record. Although he's a big phony and often has empty numbers, he's never been suspected of using steroids. The controversy will end if and when he breaks the record.I'm not a huge baseball fan, but I just can't take this record seriously. Most of the home run stats of the past decade will always have a big * next to them IMO.
Mate, you've called it exactly right there. Bonds was already considered one of the all time greats before he went on the juice - even if he hadn't touched the stuff I think that we'd still be ranking him right now as one of the very greatest ever. I read a good article about this saying that Bonds got frustrated with seeing lesser players than him (like McGwire) start breaking records ahead of him because they were on the juice, so he wanted to get on it too.That opinion is shared by many baseball fans as well. This record, along with the single season home run records that McGwire and Bonds broke, will always be tainted in the eyes of many. I'm torn about it myself. I think the record itself is the most hollowed one in all American sports. Therefore, I want to honor it just for that reason. Plus, IMO, the tragedy of it all is that Bonds would've been considered one of the greatest players of all time even WITHOUT steroids. He didn't need to juice up, he was that good. I don't think an official * is required next to the record, even if Bonds is convicted of using steroids later on. Otherwise like you said, the entire past decade should have an * next to all records. In due time Alex Rodriguez should break this record. Although he's a big phony and often has empty numbers, he's never been suspected of using steroids. The controversy will end if and when he breaks the record.
He did admit it, but it was in a courtroom under oath and thus baseball can't use it. And it helps because a ball that would otherwise be caught safely gets pushed 30 feet more and becomes a home run. Steroids also recuperation from playing and injuries, etc.Pardon my ignorance, but how does Steroid help them hit more home runs ? I am not a Barry Bond fan(dont know enough about baseball to become a fan of anyone) but I won't believe that he took steroid until I hear it from Barry himself or until he is caught.
Exactly. I can take all the steroids in the world, but I still won't be hitting any home runs. However, a baseball player who already is a good athlete and has skills to hit a home run can benefit from steroids. A ball that would normally have been a deep fly ball out, would now go for a home run. And like SS mentioned, it also helps in recovering faster from injuries. Considering Bonds' age and the fact that he still plays at an elite level, you have to wonder how much help he got in that regard. Like I mentioned above, the saddest part is that Bonds didn't need to do all this. He was an awesome player before taking steroids and IMO would've been recognized as one of the greatest ever. He apparently got jealous of the big contracts that McGwire and Sosa were getting after being on the juice and decided to copy them. Due to his tremendous talent, I still will think fondly of Bonds. I would've ranked him as the 3rd greatest home run hitter all time (behind Ruth and Mays). However, the steroid controversy does taint my image of him.He did admit it, but it was in a courtroom under oath and thus baseball can't use it. And it helps because a ball that would otherwise be caught safely gets pushed 30 feet more and becomes a home run. Steroids also recuperation from playing and injuries, etc.
As far as I remember, I dont think he admitted that he took Steroids. Bonds is still hitting those home runs and without steroids, So I dont think I will believe that he was hitting them over the park because of 'roids except for may be one season where he hit 73 HRs.He did admit it, but it was in a courtroom under oath and thus baseball can't use it. And it helps because a ball that would otherwise be caught safely gets pushed 30 feet more and becomes a home run. Steroids also recuperation from playing and injuries, etc.
Would you mind posting his batting avg. for his career season-wise. I dont know where and how to get them.Steroids not only provide enhanced power and injury recovery but they can also help you hit better - just take a look at Barry's batting average soar in 2001 (.330, .370, .340, .360 - he's a career .300 hitter) at the age of 37.
Yankees fan.bonds, bonds, bonds, steroids, steroids im sick of hearing this crap for the last 3 years.
Can we please get back to the most important thing happening in baseball right now?.
Which is the yankees are only 5 games behind the blosuxs, we are in for another classic redsox choke
This has a chance of being as legendery as the 1978 choke, only way it could get any better is if a boston massacre version 3.0 was mixed into it.
The transformation that Barry Bonds achieved through the use of
performance-enhancing drugs is reflected in his batting statistics.
Bonds began using steroids before the start of the 1999 season, when
he was 34 years old. His numbers, as compiled by baseball-reference.com,
show that his performance improved dramatically at a time when otherwise
he might have been approaching the end of his career.
Of the five best offensive seasons in Bonds' career, four came after
he was 35 years old - and after 1999, the year he began using steroids.
The historic 2001 season, when he was 36 years old (his age as of
Opening Day), was the best of all - .328 batting average, 73 home runs,
an on-base percentage of .515. But 2002, when he was 37 (.370, 46 HR)
and 2004, when he was 39, (.362, 45 HR) also were excellent seasons for
Bonds, and 2003, when he was 38, was not far off the mark.
In fact, of Bonds' five best seasons, only one came in what is usually
considered a baseball player's prime. That was 1993, before steroids,
when Bonds was 28 years old and playing his first season for the Giants.
Year Age AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG
2001 36 476 129 156 32 2 73 137 177 93 .328 .515 .863
2002 37 403 117 149 31 2 46 110 198 47 .370 .582 .799
2004 39 373 129 135 27 3 45 101 232 41 .362 .609 .812
1993 28 539 129 181 38 4 46 123 126 79 .336 .458 .677
2003 38 390 111 133 22 1 45 90 148 58 .341 .529 .749
Bonds' home run production also increased after he began using steroids.
In his 19-year career (through 2004), Bonds hit 45 or more home runs in
six seasons. Five of those seasons were after 1999 - after age 35, and
after he had begun using performance-enhancing drugs.
Year Age HR
2001 36 73
2000 35 49
2002 37 46
1993 28 46
2004 39 45
2003 38 45
Another measure of Bonds' power surge is home run frequency - the number
of at-bats it took him, on average, to hit each home run. Over the first
13 years of his career - that is, before steroids - he hit a home run
every 16.2 at-bats. His most productive year during that period was 1994,
when he hit a home run every 10.6 at-bats. (Bonds played in 112 of the
Giants' 115 games in 1994, the season that ended in a lockout. He hit 37
home runs in 391 at-bats.)
From 1999 through 2004 - after steroids - the frequency with which Bonds
struck homers nearly doubled, to one every 8.5 at-bats. His best year was
2001, when he hit a home run every 6.5 at-bats.
YR AB/HR
1986 25.8
1987 22.0
1988 22.4
1989 30.5
1990 15.7
1991 20.4
1992 13.9
1993 11.7
1994 10.6
1995 15.3
1996 12.3
1997 13.3
1998 14.9
1999 10.4
2000 9.8
2001 6.5
2002 8.8
2003 8.7
2004 8.3
Before steroids, Bonds was an outstanding player and a likely Hall
of Famer, the numbers affirm. In more than 6,600 at-bats over 13
seasons, he batted .290 and hit 411 homers with 1,216 RBIs. He made
the All-Star team eight times and was selected the National League's
Most Valuable Player in 1990, 1992 and 1993. Had he retired after the
1998 season, he would rank 40th on the all-time home run list, above
Duke Snider. His 1,357 walks would rank 28th.
Using a mathematical average to roll those 13 seasons into a single year,
we see that Bonds, before steroids, hit for average and power and was an
excellent base runner. The composite Bonds year during that period looks
like this:
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP
86-98 146 509 105 147 31 5 32 93 34 10 104 81 .290 .411
But after age 35 - after steroids - Bonds improved his game in most
categories. From 1999 to 2004, he had far better power and drove in and
scored more runs. His batting average increased by an astonishing 38
points, and his on-base percentage soared because of a big increase in
his walk total, which already was high.
At what should have been the end of his baseball career, Bonds became a
significantly better hitter than earlier in his career, as a composite
of those years shows.
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP
99-04 136 413 118 136 27 2 49 105 10 2 158 63 .328 .517
The post-steroids Bonds also became one of the greatest hitters of all time.
Lee Sinins, creator of the Sabermetric Baseball Encyclopedia, used
statistician Bill James' "runs created" formula, a measure of total
batting production, to determine the best offensive performances in
baseball history. As Sinins ran the numbers, Bonds' 73-homer year in
2001 was the second-best offensive season any player has ever had -
second only to Babe Ruth's 1921 season, when the New York Yankees star hit
.378 with 171 RBI.
Year Age AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP RC
RUTH 1921 26 540 177 204 44 16 59 171 145 81 .378 .512 243
BONDS 2001 36 476 129 156 32 2 73 137 177 93 .328 .515 228
Three of Bonds' post-steroids seasons were among the top 10 in baseball
history, according to Sinins' list. Only Ruth had more, with five top-10
seasons.
# Name Year Age Tm BA HR RBI RC
1 RUTH 1921 26 NYY .378 59 171 243
2 BONDS 2001 36 SFG .328 73 137 228
3 RUTH 1923 28 NYY .393 41 131 227
4 RUTH 1920 25 NYY .376 54 137 216
5 GEHRIG 1927 24 NYY .373 47 175 215
6 RUTH 1927 32 NYY .356 60 164 211
6 FOXX 1932 24 PHA .364 58 169 211
8 RUTH 1924 29 NYY .378 46 121 209
9 BONDS 2002 37 SFG .370 46 110 206
10 BONDS 2004 39 SFG .362 45 101 204
10 GEHRIG 1936 33 NYY .354 49 152 204
10 HORNSBY 1922 26 STL .401 42 152 204
Sinins' study also underscores the fact that in baseball terms,
Bonds was an old man when he emerged as one of the greats of the game.
Bonds was 36 when he had his 73-home run season, the first of three seasons
that rank in the top 10; he was 39 in 2004, which Sinins puts as 10th best
of all time, tied with Lou Gehrig's 1936 season for the Yankees and Rogers
Hornsby's efforts for the 1922 Cardinals.
No player was older than 33 when he performed at this high level. (Gehrig was
33 in 1936.) Ruth was 26 in 1921, which Sinins rates as the best season of all
time. The average age of the other players on the top-10 seasons list - along
with Ruth, Gehrig and Hornsby, there is Jimmie Foxx, the old-time Philadelphia
Athletic - was 27.
Yet another measure of Bonds' late-in-life power surge: By the end of 2005,
he had hit more home runs after age 35 than any of the game's great sluggers:
HR 35&UP Total HR %
BONDS 263 708 37
AARON 245 755 32
PALMEIRO 208 569 37
RUTH 198 714 28
JACKSON 153 563 27
MCCOVEY 137 521 26
MCGWIRE 126 583 22
MURRAY 125 504 25
SCHMIDT 123 548 22
MAYS 118 660 18
ROBINSON 111 586 19
BANKS 108 512 21
WILLIAMS 103 521 20
KILLEBREW 86 573 15
SOSA 49 588 8
OTT 48 511 9
MANTLE 40 536 7
MATTHEWS 19 512 4
FOXX 7 534 1
Sean Forman, proprietor of baseball-reference.com, used a different statistic
to track Bonds' power surge after 1999. In a study done in 2004 for The
Chronicle, he applied a measure of offensive performance called OPS, for
on-base percentage plus slugging percentage, to compare Bonds to other great
hitters.
Forman's conclusion: Starting in 2000, after Bonds had recovered from a 1999
elbow injury, he put together the greatest five consecutive seasons of any
hitter in baseball history. During that stretch, when he was age 35 to 39,
Bonds batted .339, hit 258 homers and drove in 544 runs, with an OPS of 1.316.
His performance was slightly better than what the study showed was the
second-best five-year run of all time: Babe Ruth's first five years with the
Yankees. From age 25 to 29, Ruth hit .370 with 235 homeruns, 659 runs batted in,
and an OPS of 1.288. No other players in baseball history came close, the study
found.